Gandhi blames removal from parliament on Modi

The Nation  |  Mar 26, 2023

 Gandhi blames removal from parliament on Modi
NEW DELHI    -     Top Indian opposition figure Rahul Gandhi said Saturday his disqualifi­cation from parliament was retribu­tion for his demanding a probe into Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s re­lationship with a controversial ty­coon. Gandhi was stripped of his parliamentary seat on Friday, a day after a defamation conviction in Mo­di’s home state of Gujarat for a 2019 campaign-trail remark seen as an in­sult to the premier.

Modi’s government has been wide­ly accused of using the law to target and silence critics. The removal of its chief opponent comes at a time when its relationship with one of In­dia’s most powerful industrialists has been under scrutiny.

Modi has been a close associate of Gautam Adani for decades but the latter’s business empire has been subject of renewed attention this year after a US investment firm ac­cused it of “brazen” corporate fraud.

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“I have been disqualified because the prime minister... is scared of the next speech that is going to come on Adani,” Gandhi told reporters. “I am here defending the democrat­ic voice of the Indian people,” he added. “I am not scared of these threats.”

Speaking at a news briefing on Saturday, Mr Gand­hi said: “It makes me no difference if I’m disqualified... Disqualify me for life.... I will keep going, I will not stop.”

Gandhi, of the opposition Con­gress party, was sentenced to two years imprisonment on Thursday but walked free on bail after his law­yers vowed to appeal.

However, the conviction made him ineligible to continue sitting as a lawmaker in the lower house of par­liament, the chamber’s joint secre­tary said Friday.

Gandhi, 52, is the leading face of Congress, once the dominant force of Indian politics but now a shadow of its former self. He has struggled to challenge the electoral juggernaut of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party and its nationalist appeals to the coun­try’s Hindu majority. Thursday’s case stemmed from a remark made during the 2019 election campaign in which Gandhi had asked why “all thieves have Modi as (their) com­mon surname”. His comments were seen as a slur against the prime min­ister, who went on to win the election in a landslide. Members of the gov­ernment also said the remark was a smear against all those sharing the Modi surname, which is associated with the lower rungs of India’s tra­ditional caste hierarchy. Legal action has been widely deployed against opposition party figures and institu­tions seen as critical of the Modi gov­ernment in recent years.

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Gandhi faces several other def­amation cases in the country and a money-laundering case that has been snaking its way through In­dia’s glacial legal system for more than a decade.

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